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Recent
Articles
Safdar A, Chaturvedi V, Cross EW, Park S, Bernard EM, Armstrong
D, Perlin DS
Prospective study of Candida species in patients at a comprehensive
cancer center.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother 2001 Jul;45(7):2129-33
PMID: 11408236
Since most nosocomial systemic yeast infections arise from the endogenous
flora of the patient, we prospectively evaluated the species stratification
and antifungal susceptibility profile of Candida spp. associated
with heavy colonization and systemic infection in patients at Memorial
Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York. A total of 349 Candida
isolates were obtained from 223 patients during the later half of
1998. Cancer was the most common underlying disease, occurring in
91% of the patients, including 61.8% with organ and 23.7% with hematological
malignancies; 4.4% of the patients had AIDS. Candida albicans was
the predominant species (67.3%); among 114 non-albicans Candida
spp., C. glabrata (45.6%) was the most frequent, followed by C.
tropicalis (18.4%), C. parapsilosis (16.6%), and C. krusei (9.6%).
The overall resistance to triazole-based agents among all yeast
isolates was 9.4 and 10.8% for fluconazole and itraconazole, respectively.
A total of 5% of C. albicans strains were resistant to triazole
antifungals, whereas 30.8 and 46.2% of C. glabrata strains were
resistant to fluconazole (MIC > or = 64 microg/ml) and itraconazole
(MIC > or = 1 microg/ml), respectively. A significant association
was observed between prior treatment with triazole and isolation
of fluconazole-resistant C. albicans (P = 0.005, OR 36), although
this relationship was not seen in C. glabrata isolates (P = 0.4).
This study reinforces the importance of periodic, prospective surveillance
of clinical fungal isolates to determine appropriate prophylactic,
empiric, and preemptive antifungal therapy for the highly susceptible
patient population.

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